“Hi @washingtonpost not only am I tweeting about Benghazi, I’m at the hearing wearing a red dress & heels,” TownHall’s Katie Pavilich wrote in response to the demographics mentioned in the Post tweet. “Not exactly a rich-middle aged man”

Thousands of people have tweeted on the #Benghazi hashtag since the September attack, helping disseminate, and even steer, the divisive political narrative of what happened that night.

Thanks to Demographics Pro, a Twitter analysis firm, we have some vague idea of who’s tweeting the most: According to their report, #Benghazi tweeters are 58.3% male, with an average age of 52.6 years and a median income of $61,800 (“within the top 20 percent of overall Twitter distribution,” the report adds).

The tweeters are also overwhelmingly white and married, according to Demographics Pro; they also like Chick-fil-A and Walmart — two brands most often associated with conservatives.

Both The Washington Post and Dewey tweeted later that afternoon clarifying that the earlier tweet was in reference to statistics from the Demographics Pro report.